"Bickford Honey, aged seventeen years, the product of care and the source of contention, strolled in the evening of a summer day toward the home of Mr. Mason. In his trousers pocket there were a few pence, his hat set jauntily on the back of his head, he felt that life was good."
Thursday, June 11, 2026
Another George Manning-Sanders novel surfaces
Saturday, June 6, 2026
Saturday's hand-painted postcard
Sunday, May 31, 2026
From 1976: computers & kindness
First up is an article about KIND, aka the Kindness Club. The Kindness Club, a humane organization, was founded in New Brunswick, Canada, in 1959. The Human Society of the United States took responsibility for the U.S. youth clubs and branded them KIND — Kindness In Nature's Defense.
"To carry out the club's program, members are encouraged to help fight against the abuse of animals. And members do more than speak out when they see evidence of cruelty to animals; they follow their words with actions," the Grolier's article states.
For an update, Wikipedia adds: "In 2009, the Kindness Club's 50th anniversary year, most of its members were in Canada. Continuing to base itself on [Albert] Schweitzer's reverence for life philosophy, the club promotes humane education for children and contributes to local initiatives including subsidized spay/neuter programs and donations of pet food to food banks."
Given that I took a break while putting this post together to take a bowl of food to a skunk on the back patio, I think I might qualify to be in the Kindness Club.
Meanwhile, another page in this book from a half-century ago touts the emergence of a computer's "artistic skills." "This portrait is 'painted' by a computer," the caption states. "It is made up of about 200 separate squares, each in one of 16 shades of gray. The portrait is part of an experiment being carried out by Bell Laboratories 'to learn the least amount of visual information a picture may contain and still be recognizable.' Have someone hold the page about 15 feet (5 meters) away from you, and squint your eyes. Hint: the subject of the portrait was president of the United States during its most critical period."While the short caption doesn't mention it, the computer programmer for this Lincoln 'portrait' was Leon Harmon. And the image inspired Salvador Dalí to create a famous lithograph (though that's not quite the right description) that has been much-counterfeited.
Saturday, May 30, 2026
From the readers: Montoursville, Skyrim, Africa and much more
- 1967 advertisement for a flying saucer lamp in Saucer News (which contains links to all of the other UFO posts)
- Sunday evening ramblings
- Vintage, foreboding religious tract: The Mark of the Beast
Thursday, May 28, 2026
Gimbels & Gumball
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
Some Postcrossing arrivals
Monday, May 25, 2026
It's the 50th anniversary of the opening of Brigantine Castle
- "I remember going as a kid. I thought it was a real castle. What a great time to be alive."
- "Scary tv commercials wedged in between the terrifying 'Creature Double Feature' on channel 48"
- "Its TV commercials were the first time I ever heard J.S. Bach's iconic Toccata and Fugue."
- "I went through it as a kid. Remember the fake rats going across my feet!"
- "Best Job I ever had!!"
- "We went the year it opened & didn't get past the first floor, that witch did us in. Granted we were 5, 10, 11 & 13."
- "The vampire that jumped out of the portrait scared the crap out of me!"
Tuesday, May 19, 2026
T.E. Dikty, regarding science and science fiction 70 years ago
It seems to me that in this time of treacherous antiscience, rejection of historical truths and a warming world ever-teetering on the brink of greater violence, some of these passages by Dikty are worth amplifying:
- "This was the year when the United States announced it would shortly launch an Earth satellite, when hundreds of lives were saved by the polio vaccine, and when a general announced that hundreds of millions — friend and foe — would be lost in the event of another war because of radioactive fallout."
- "In Germany, a major science-fiction crisis impended when the government was about to ban Utopia and Utopia Grossband on the grounds they contained 'atomic war' stories. Due in large part to a plea by well-known American science-fiction fan and agent Forrest J Ackerman, the German censor board reversed its stand and allowed the magazines to continue."
- "Parents throughout the nation would have no difficulty at all in pointing out the most signficant science development during the year. That was the vaccination — after some delays — of children and expectant mothers with the Salk polio vaccine. Although not 100% effective, there was no doubt that the vaccine substantially reduced the number of cases."
- "Atomic power for peaceful uses was being investigated more eagerly each year, with the realization that by the year 2000 the world will be using eight times as much energy as it does now and fossil fuels will be incapable of supplying this demand."
- "Electronic brains were in the news again. This time they were going to replace the weatherman in forecasting the weather."
- "A guided missile was developed which is guided to its target by the heat given off by said target (and in what science-fiction story did we first read about this?)."
- "With every passing day Tomorrow was a little closer, and science-fiction writers had to be spry and inventive to stay ahead of onrushing technology. The world of the future was no longer just around the corner — it was racing pell mell up the block."










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